Various people and protesters gathered in downtown Cleveland during the weeklong Republican National Convention, from July 20 to 23. Here are a couple highlights from the event. All stories originally appeared on USATODAY.com during the week of the convention.

Members of the social justice group Mijente gathered in Public Square to protest Donald Trump’s policies on immigration, holding banners that read “Wall Off Trump.”

The Rev. Wendy von Courter said she and other Mijente protesters were there for one reason: “To continue to draw attention to what a vote for Trump means. It’s a vote against blacks and Hispanics.”

Von Courter called James Luther Adams, an Americans professor at Harvard Divinity Schoolduring World War II, a source of inspiration and guidance. She said Adams “often quoted Germans who regretted not stopping Hitler before he rose to power.”

The group planned to continue its protest throughout the day in other parts of the city near the convention, symbolically giving Trump the wall he wants, said Ernesto Lopez of Mijente.

Mijente was joined by members of several other groups that support their cause.

“United We Dream Action is here in support of Mijente to block off the hate of the Republican Party,” said Austin native Sheridan Aguirre, 22, who also mentioned the larger goal of fighting misogyny, Islamophobia, Xenophobia and police brutality. “Our message is all encompassing because migrants come from all walks of life, and our identities and issues are interconnected.”

Cruz to Cleveland

Although the streets of downtown Cleveland are filled with stands offering Donald Trump pins, bobbleheads and T-shirts, not all Republicans here are Trump supporters.

Texas native Barbara Peters traveled to the Republican National Convention with a group called CRUZ to Cleveland Convention. (Photo: Michelle R. Martinelli/Special to USA TODAY)

Austin, Texas-native Barbara Peters said she traveled to the Republican National Convention with a group called CRUZ to Cleveland Convention, which continues to back former presidential candidate Sen. Ted Cruz, against the odds. Peters said she and like-minded others have been tirelessly working to unbind the delegates, despite Monday’s failed vote to reject convention rules requiring delegates to vote for the candidate to which they are bound. .

“We’ve been working night and day, contacting all the delegates, the rules committee, (and) letting them know how we feel,” said Peters, adding her efforts are also to keep presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton out of the White House.

Pink Protest

Some 30 volunteers from Planned Parenthood Advocates of Ohio circled the streets of Cleveland on Tuesday during the Republican National Convention, demonstrating their opposition to cuts in healthcare in Ohio and nationwide.

The volunteers split into three groups protesting at various local landmarks, including theRock and Roll Hall of Fame and First Energy Stadium, said Erica Sackin, the political communications director with the Planned Parenthood Federation of America.

“We’re out here protesting attacks to care that Planned Parenthood provides to Ohio and across the country,” Sackin said. “These health centers serve millions around the country, and for some, it’s their only healthcare provider.”

The volunteers plan to gather closer to the perimeter of the convention at the Quicken Loans Arena on Wednesday, where they will hand out “Protect Yourself from Trump” condoms.

A self-described pro-peace protester, Vietnam War veteran Lou Pumphrey, 73, attracted the attention of passersby downtown with his peace sign American flag juxtaposed with his Army uniform circa 1966.

Vietnam War veteran Lou Pumphrey, 73, came to Cleveland to spread a message of peace. (Photo: Michelle R. Martinelli/Special for USA TODAY)

The Shaker Heights, Ohio, native knows the image he’s presenting is “something not too many people are going to forget,” and he says it’s helping him explain there are veterans who are for peace.

“I’m trying to get across an alternate message here that there needs to be a counterweight to all the mindless, macho flag-waving, red, white and blue, star-spangled war-mongering that we hear from politicians that have never been in a war, never will be in a war, and have no qualms about sending American men and women in uniform to harm’s way,” said Pumphrey, who spent a year in Vietnam and was discharged in July 1968.

With the help of Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton and generic cereal, New Jersey native Darrin Maconi, 27, is trying to send his friend to college.

Darrin Maconi, 27, sells Trump Flakes and Clinton Crunch cereal at the RNC in Cleveland to help raise money for a friend’s college tuition. (Michelle R. Martinelli)

He designed boxes of Trump Flakes and Clinton Crunch to sell at the Republican National Convention this week in Cleveland to help fund his friend’s tuition to Brookdale Community College. Each box has a caricature of the candidates on the front with a board game on the back of Clinton’s and a word search on the back of Trump’s.

“There’s got to be some finesse to it,” said Maconi, who was camped out at Euclid Ave. and East 4th Street. “If you had a box of Ronald Reagan flakes from 50 years ago, you would never eat that. You would keep that right?”

Starting the convention with 1,000 boxes split evenly, Maconi sold 400 boxes by 6 p.m. on Monday — 300 of Trump Flakes and 100 of Clinton Crunch. If he doesn’t sell out by the end of the convention Thursday, he said he’s headed to Philadelphia for the Democratic National Convention next week.

About Medill Washington

The stories here were reported, written and produced by Northwestern University graduate journalism students in the Washington program of the Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications . Most also were published or broadcast by media organizations served by the school's unique news distribution plan. We specialize in enterprise reporting, multimedia and online journalism, as well as on accountability, working to uncover misbehavior by people in power.